Patients with cancer are a vulnerable population, and they are prone to many harms during such pandemics, including susceptibility to life-threatening infections and interruption of their cancer or usual medical care. Hence, oncologists have faced a major challenge to balance the delivery of high-quality continuous unfragmented cancer care with minimizing patients’ risk of exposure during care. The negative impact of the pandemic is likely to be greater in low and middle income countries with limited resources, poor infrastructure, shortage of health care providers and organized care teams, scarcity of medical supplies and personal protective equipment (PPE), and poor access to technology12-14—resulting in a lack of ability to provide and deliver critical care.